Two weeks ago I attended a performance at the Sunderland Empire Theatre, one of the sources of inspiration for my novel, Melody for Lizzie.In the novel, Elizabeth comes to Sunderland to perform at the Empire as part of a tour of the north-east of England in 1910. Originally called The Empire Palace, the theatre was built by Richard Thornton. He had been in partnership with two other great Edwardian theatre magnates, Edward Moss and Oswald Stoll (of London Coliseum fame). Thornton broke away to build his own music hall. It opened its doors for the first time in 1907. The Empire has been the crowning glory of the local theatre world ever since, and is still going strong. Nowadays the theatre presents many West End shows, as well as ballet, opera and plays. I visited it often as a child, mostly to see ballet, and sometimes the pantomime. I even had the privilege of seeing the great Margot Fonteyn dance the role of Aurora in the Sleeping Beauty. Our tickets were for row D in the Stalls. Imagine our delight when we discovered that the first three rows of seats had been removed to accommodate the large orchestra, and we were actually sitting right in the front row. The Empire has a large stage, superb for ballet. Right from my earliest visits I was captivated by the grandeur of the red plush seats and gold decorations. In the circle coffee bar area there was a sepia photograph portrait of a beautiful, elegant lady with a bouffant hairstyle. I later learned that this was Vesta Tilley, who was an immensely popular star of the Edwardian music hall, singing character songs dressed as a young man. She laid the cornerstone of the Empire in 1906, and returned to open it the following year. The theatre bar is now called the Vesta Tilley Bar.

We would sometimes sit in the Upper Circle, which in my childhood had rather hard benches. Above that was a tier we called the Gods, which I have never seen open. It's steep enough in the Upper Circle, so it must be dizzying in the highest regions of the theatre! Just think of those early music hall audiences, crowded into the Gallery, clapping and cheering their favourite stars.When I was a young child, my mother began to sing in the Sunderland Amateur Operatic Society. As soon as I was sixteen I also joined, remaining a member until I left school. Every year the society performed a musical show at the Empire Theatre for a week. It was thrilling to perform on this impressive stage. I once sang in a quartet in the musical Kismet, and had a line to speak! It was an inspiration just to go in through the Stage Door and use the dressing rooms like all the stars down the years. But my talents were to lead me elsewhere, and as a musician I began to yearn to play in the orchestra pit.After many years living away from the north-east I returned to my native shores, and finally was given the chance to play in the orchestra for the Sunderland Amateurs a few years ago. By this time the Empire had undergone a massive overhaul, and the backstage area was all new and expanded. I relished the chance to sit beneath the stage playing my flute and piccolo for the singers and dancers, to hear the applause and see the audience from a completely different angle. I even went and stood on the empty stage after the last show was over, drinking in that unique dusty smell of the theatre, the muffled sounds of the curtains and flats, and the stage hands working above.Earlier this month it was back to the Upper Circle to see the Birmingham Royal Ballet in their magnificent new production, Aladdin. As usual it was an uplifting experience. Whenever I visit the Empire, I try to imagine how those early audiences would have felt. They must have thought that they were truly entering a royal palace when they walked through the doors. To this day, the Sunderland Empire still creates a world of fantasy and escapism, a kaleidoscope of music and colour, and I shall never tire of it.Click here for more photos of the Sunderland Empire Theatre.

After months of hard work, I have finally published the ebook version of my novel, Melody for Lizzie. So I'm inviting you all to raise a virtual glass of champagne to toast my new venture.The original book had been written on my old computer that only used five-inch floppy disks. Those were the days! In 1995 I felt quite up-to-date when the publisher asked me to send the floppy disks to use for publication of the book. That was before I had experienced Windows computers and the Internet!So over the past year, in between other writing projects, I have learned how to scan, save and edit my novel so that I have a copy in Word. After Christmas it was still languishing, the last few chapters unfinished. So I took myself in hand, and promised that I would have it online by the first meeting of the northern chapter of the Romantic Novelists' Association at the beginning of March.After a few tweaks to the text (including the removal of the word 'smog', as I have since learned that it wouldn't have been used in the Edwardian era), I proof-read the novel several times. With only a few minor glitches I managed to convert the novel for publication. Then I had the task of finding a suitable image for the cover. It took hours and hours of scouring royalty-free photographs online, until I finally settled on the stage with the roses, as I felt that it kept the spirit of the original cover illustration. I also wanted to keep the colour theme the same. At our RNA meeting last week, I asked the other writers for some feedback on the cover design. Some of them gave me tips on how I could improve it. I spent much of the weekend trawling through photos again, and finally chose an image for Lizzie herself to add to the design. After three hours of editing, the new cover was finally finished, and ready to upload to Amazon and Smashwords.Today I finished my author website at www.evelynorange.co.uk, and started my new blog. I hope you'll visit from time to time to share my news and views.So now it's time to celebrate and raise a glass!